<h2><SPAN name="Ch8" name="Ch8">Chapter 8</SPAN>: The Invasion Of Mysore.</h2>
<p>For some time, there was a pause in the hostilities. Tippoo
remained with his army near Pondicherry, carrying on negotiations
with the French governor, and arranging for the despatch of an
envoy to France, with a request that the Republic would furnish him
with six thousand French troops. While he was thus wasting his
time, General Meadows was slowly moving, with the army, towards an
encampment formed at Vellout, some eighteen miles west of
Madras.</p>
<p>On the 14th of December, a messenger arrived with the news that
Lord Cornwallis had arrived from Calcutta, two days before, with
considerable reinforcements, and that he was about to assume the
supreme command of the army. The news caused unbounded
satisfaction. By the extreme dilatoriness of his movements, and
especially by the manner in which he had allowed Tippoo to pass him
near Caveripatam, when he might easily have attacked him, while his
army was still struggling through the pass, General Meadows had
disgusted his troops. He had frittered away, without striking a
single blow, the finest army that the British had, up to that time,
ever put into the field in India; and had enabled Tippoo,
unmolested, to spread destruction over a large extent of
country.</p>
<p>The only countervailing success that had been gained, by the
British, was a brilliant victory won by Colonel Hartley, who was in
command of a Bombay force, consisting of a European regiment and
two battalions of Sepoys. With these, he engaged Hossein Ali, who
had been left by Tippoo in Malabar, with a force of 9000 men, when
the sultan first retreated before General Meadows' advance. This
force was defeated, with a loss of 1000 men killed and wounded,
900, including Hossein himself, taken prisoners on the field, and
1500 in the pursuit; the total British loss being only 52 men. A
few days after this victory, General Abercrombie arrived from
Madras with reinforcements, and the whole of Tippoo's fortified
places in Malabar were captured, one after another, and the entire
province conquered.</p>
<p>As soon as Lord Cornwallis reached the camp at Vellout, with a
large train of draught animals that had been brought by sea from
Calcutta, the Rajah and his troops received orders to join him. It
was on the 29th of January, 1791, that the commander in chief
arrived at Vellout, and the Rajah arrived there on the 4th of
February. As he was the bearer of a letter from the Resident at
Arcot, he was at once enabled to have an interview with Lord
Cornwallis. On finding that he could speak English, the general
received him with much courtesy.</p>
<p>"I am glad, indeed, to have a troop like yours with us, Rajah,"
he said. "There are few of my officers who know anything of this
part of the country, and your local knowledge will be invaluable.
Moreover, as I do not speak the language myself, it will be a great
advantage to have someone with me through whom I can communicate
freely with the people of the country. There is no doubt that such
communications are much more effectual, when they come through one
of their own princes, than through English officers. I shall
therefore order that, on the march, a space be allotted for the
encampment of your troop by the side of that occupied by my own
escort; and hope that, when not employed on scouting or other
duties, you will ride with my staff.</p>
<p>"Your mother, Rajah, was an English lady, I am told."</p>
<p>"She was, sir. My sister, who married an Englishman, is at
present in Madras with my family, and her son is with me.</p>
<p>"I beg to recommend him to your lordship. He speaks my language
perfectly, and having been brought up in his father's country,
naturally speaks English as well as Hindustani; and will
understand, far better than I can do, any orders that you may give.
He has come out, with his mother, in the hopes of finding his
father, who has, if alive, been a prisoner for several years in the
hands of Tippoo.</p>
<p>"He is a fine young fellow. The other day, he made a most
dangerous reconnaissance into Mysore, in order to ascertain
Tippoo's movements. He had with him a young officer of mine, two or
three years older than himself; and when I tell you that the two
young fellows held a ruined hut, for hours, against the attack of
some seventy of Tippoo's troops, and beat them off with a loss of
upwards of twenty killed, I need hardly say that he has no lack of
courage."</p>
<p>"You are right, indeed, Rajah. Let the lad ride beside you, with
my staff. Some day he will, perhaps, shorten a long day's march by
giving me details of this adventure of his."</p>
<p>On the 5th of February the army started on its march, and on the
11th reached Vellore. Tippoo had, for two months, been wasting his
time at Pondicherry; but, upon hearing news that instead of, as he
expected, the English general having marched south from Vellout to
meet him, he had turned westward; and that Mysore, itself, was
threatened with invasion, he hastily broke up his camp, and marched
at full speed for the ghauts; and, reaching the table land, hurried
to oppose the British army, as it endeavoured to ascend the pass
going from Vellore through Amboor, by which he made sure he would
come.</p>
<p>Lord Cornwallis encouraged him in the idea, by sending a
battalion a considerable distance up the pass; while he started
north and entered the easy pass of Mooglee, leading west from
Chittoor to Moolwagle. He pushed rapidly up the pass, and gained
the summit before Tippoo could reach the spot and oppose him. It
took four days longer for the battering train, baggage, and
provisions to reach the top of the pass. After a delay of a day or
two, to rest the animals, which included sixty-seven elephants
which had been brought from Bengal, the army set out for Bangalore,
the second largest town in Mysore.</p>
<p>The Rajah's troops had been busily employed, from the time the
army moved from Vellout. The men, on their tireless little horses,
carried his messages to the various divisions and brigades, brought
up news of the progress of the train, or rode on ahead with the
officers of the quartermaster's department, whose duty it was to
precede the army, to decide on the camping ground, and to mark off
the spots to be occupied by the various corps. In this way, they
saved the regular cavalry from much fatiguing duty.</p>
<p>Surajah and Dick were generally with the party that went on with
the quartermasters, and, as soon as the camping ground was fixed
upon, aided them in the purchase of forage and food from the
natives, as it was most desirable that the forty days' provisions
the army carried with it should remain intact, until the army had
passed up the ghauts. Beyond that, it was expected that it would be
harassed by the Mysore horse, who would render it impossible for
the cavalry to go out to collect forage, or provisions, from the
country through which it marched.</p>
<p>So well did the Rajah's troop perform its duties, that Lord
Cornwallis ordered it to be taken on the strength of the army, and
to receive the pay and rations of native cavalry in the service. On
the day after leaving Vellore, the general sent an orderly to
request the Rajah and his nephew to ride with him.</p>
<p>"I have not had an opportunity of hearing of your scouting
expedition," he said to Dick, "and shall be glad if you will give
me full details of it."</p>
<p>Dick related the adventure, from the time they had started.</p>
<p>"You were wonderfully lucky, in getting back safely," the
general said, when he had finished. "At least, luck is not the
proper word, for your safety was due to your quick wittedness and
courage; and your escape with your companion from the guard house,
the manner in which you got through the fort in the pass, and your
defence of that hut, until the Rajah's troop arrived to your
rescue, were all of them admirably managed."</p>
<p>He then proceeded to inquire further into the object for which
Dick had come out to India.</p>
<p>"I heartily wish you success in your search," he said, "and
sincerely hope we may obtain news of your father. I do not know
what your intentions may be, afterwards, but should you wish to
enter the army, I will at once nominate you to a commission, in one
of our native cavalry regiments."</p>
<p>"I am deeply obliged to your Excellency," Dick replied, "but as,
if we learn nothing of my father during the war, I am quite
resolved to spend, if necessary, some years in Mysore in the search
for him, I must therefore be free to devote my time to that."</p>
<p>"At any rate," the general said, "if at any time you should feel
free to accept my offer, it will be open to you. In the meantime, I
will appoint you one of the interpreters to the army, during the
expedition, and will attach you to my own staff. It will give you a
recognised position, and it is only right that, as you are doing
good service, you should receive pay. You shall be put in orders
this evening. You can, of course, continue to camp and live with
the Rajah."</p>
<p>The change made very little difference in Dick's duties, and he
continued at his former work, in the quartermasters' department,
until the army was ready for its advance to Bangalore. To the
general surprise, as the army moved forward, nothing was seen of
Tippoo's cavalry, by which they had expected to be continually
harassed. The sultan had, as soon as he perceived that Bangalore
was threatened, hurried the whole army to that city, where he had
sent his harem when he started from Seringapatam to attack
Travancore; and instead of sending off a few hundred horsemen, to
escort them to the capital, while with his army he opposed the
advance of the British, he took his whole force with him, in order
to remove his harem with all the pomp and ceremony with which their
passage through the country was generally accompanied.
Consequently, it was not until after taking, without resistance,
the forts of Colar and Ooscotah, and arriving within ten miles of
Bangalore, that the army encountered Tippoo's cavalry.</p>
<p>This was on the 4th of March. They made an attempt to reach the
baggage trains, but were sharply repulsed, and on the following day
the army took up its position before Bangalore. As they approached
the town, three horsemen dashed out from a small grove, and rode
furiously towards a little group, consisting of Lord Cornwallis,
General Meadows, and the staff, who were reconnoitring at some
little distance from the head of the column. It was evident that
their intention was to cut down the general.</p>
<p>The Rajah, who was riding as usual with the staff, dashed
forward with four or five other officers, and encountered the
horsemen before they could reach him. The Rajah cut down one of
them, another was killed by one of the staff, and the third knocked
off his horse and captured.</p>
<p>It was learned that the enterprise was not a planned one, but
was the result of a quarrel between the men, themselves. One had
charged the others with cowardice, and in return they had
challenged him to follow them where they dared go. All had prepared
themselves for the enterprise by half intoxicating themselves with
bhang, and thus made but a poor fight, when they found their object
thwarted by the officers who threw themselves between them and
their intended victim.</p>
<p>Bangalore was a fine town, situated on a plain so elevated that
the climate was temperate, the soil fertile, and vegetation
abundant. The town was of considerable extent, that portion lying
within the fortifications being a mile and a quarter long, by half
a mile broad. It was surrounded by a strong rampart, a thick hedge,
and a deep, dry ditch. The wall, however, did not extend across the
side facing the fort, whose guns were supposed to render it ample
protection.</p>
<p>The fort was oval in shape, and about nine hundred yards across,
at its greatest diameter. It was defended by a broad rampart,
strengthened by thirty semicircular bastions and five outworks. The
two gates, one at each end, were also protected by outworks. In the
fort stood the splendid palace built by Tippoo. Here also were
immense foundries of cannon, factories for muskets, the arsenal,
and large magazines of grain and ammunition.</p>
<p>The position taken up by the army lay to the northeast of the
petah, or town, and the next morning a reconnoitring party,
escorted by Colonel Floyd, with the whole of the cavalry and a
brigade of infantry, went out to examine the defences of the town
and fort. Seeing a large body of laden elephants and camels,
escorted by a strong body of horsemen, Colonel Floyd rode with the
cavalry to attack them. The movement was a rash one, as the guns on
the fort opened fire, and although at first he defeated the Mysore
horse, a heavy fire was poured upon him, when entangled in broken
ground. He himself was shot by a musket ball which, striking him in
the face, passed through both jaws. It was at first believed that
he was dead, but he was carried back to camp, and ultimately
recovered. This rash attack cost the lives of seventy-one men, and
of four times as many horses.</p>
<p>As Tippoo's army was lying at a distance of only six miles away,
the general determined that it would be best, in the first place,
to capture the town without delay; and to assault the fort on that
side, as he could then do so without any fear of an attack by
Tippoo; who would be able to harass him, constantly, were he to
approach the fort from any other direction. Orders were therefore
issued for the 36th Regiment, supported by the 26th Bengal Sepoys,
and a party of artillery under Colonel Moorhouse, to prepare to
storm the north gate of the town at daybreak the next morning.</p>
<p>As soon as dawn broke, the troops rushed forward against the
gate. The outside work was speedily stormed, but as they issued
from it, towards the gate itself, they were received with a very
heavy fire from the walls, together with a storm of hand grenades.
Colonel Moorhouse brought forward a six pounder, receiving two
wounds as the piece was run up to the gate. The first time it was
fired, it had no effect beyond making a small hole, and the next
shot had no greater success. Colonel Moorhouse ordered a
twelve-pounder to be brought up, but as he was aiding to put it
into position, another ball struck him, and he fell dead.</p>
<p>While the artillerymen were pouring shot after shot into the
gate, the roar of musketry was unceasing, the 36th keeping up an
incessant fire upon the enemy upon the wall, in order to cover, as
much as possible, the operations of the gunners. At last, the gate
gave way. The troops poured in, cheering loudly, and the enemy at
once fled.</p>
<p>Many, however, took up their positions in the houses, and kept
up a galling fire, until their places of refuge were stormed by
detachments of troops, scattered through the town. By nine o'clock
all was over, and the town completely in the possession of the
British.</p>
<p>Tippoo, furious at its having been so speedily captured, moved
down early in the afternoon with a strong force of infantry; and,
marching along by the side of the fort, endeavoured to force his
way into the town through the open space at that end. He was aided
by the guns of the fort, while his artillery kept up a heavy
cannonade upon the British encampment.</p>
<p>When the sultan was seen marching towards the town, with the
evident intention of endeavouring to retake it, the 76th Regiment
was sent in to reinforce the garrison; and the three battalions
opposed so steady a resistance to Tippoo's infantry that the latter
were forced to fall back, after sustaining a loss of five hundred
men. The troops began next morning to erect batteries.</p>
<p>The position was a singular one. A small army was undertaking
the siege of a strong fortress, while an army vastly outnumbering
it was watching them; and was able, at any moment, to throw large
reinforcements into the fort through the Mysore gate, which was at
the opposite end of the fort to that attacked, the efforts of the
British being directed against the Delhi gate, which faced the
town.</p>
<p>The advantage which had been gained, by the employment of the
great train carrying the provisions for the troops, was now
manifest; for, unless the army had been so provided, it would have
been forced to retreat; as, in the face of Tippoo's army, with its
great host of cavalry, it would have been impossible to gather
provisions.</p>
<p>The first batteries erected by the engineers proved to be too
far distant from the wall of the fort to effect any material
damage, and others were commenced at a much shorter range. The work
was performed with great difficulty, for the guns of the defenders
were well served, and a storm of missiles were poured, night and
day, into the town and against the batteries. The garrison, which
consisted of eight thousand men, were frequently relieved by fresh
troops from the sultan's army, and were thus able to maintain their
fire with great vigour.</p>
<p>On the 17th, Tippoo cannonaded the British camp from a distance,
but without doing great damage. In the meantime, the fire of our
siege guns was steadily doing its work, in spite of the heavy fire
kept up on them. The stone facing of the bastion next to the
gateway was soon knocked away, but the earth banks behind, which
were very thick and constructed of a tough red clay, crumbled but
slowly. Still, the breach was day by day becoming more practicable,
and Tippoo, alarmed at the progress that had been made, moved his
army down towards the east side of the fort, and seemed to meditate
an attack upon our batteries. He placed some heavy guns behind a
bank surrounding a large tank, and opened some embrasures through
which their fire would have taken our trenches, which were now
pushed up close to the fort, in flank.</p>
<p>Lord Cornwallis at once directed a strong force to advance, as
if with the intention of attacking the new work, and Tippoo ordered
his troops to retire from it. It was evident, however, that he had
determined to give battle in order to save the fort, and the
English general therefore determined to storm the place that very
night, the 21st of March. The preparations were made secretly, lest
the news should be taken to Tippoo by one of the natives in the
town, and it was not until late in the evening that orders were
issued to the troops which were to take part in the assault.</p>
<p>The column was to be composed of the grenadier and light
companies of all the European regiments, and these were to be
followed and supported by several battalions of Sepoys. The force,
commanded by Colonel Maxwell, at eleven o'clock issued from the
town and advanced through the trenches. The besieged were vigilant,
and the instant the leading company sprang from the trenches and,
in the bright moonlight, ran forward to the breach, a number of
blue lights were lighted all along the ramparts, and a heavy
musketry fire was opened.</p>
<p>The scene was eagerly watched by the troops in the camp, every
feature being distinctly visible. The storming party could be seen,
rushing up the breach and mounting, by ladders, over the gateway,
which was the central object of attack. The enemy gathered in
masses at the top of the breach, but as soon as the stormers
collected in sufficient strength, and charged them with the
bayonet, they broke and dispersed.</p>
<p>The grenadiers moved along the ramparts to the right, clearing
it of its defences as they went along. The light companies did the
same along the ramparts to the left, while the Sepoys descended
into the body of the fort. The whole of the defenders fled towards
the Mysore gate at the other end of the fort, and when the three
bodies of troops met there, they found the gate blocked by the
masses of fugitives.</p>
<p>They charged them on all sides. The governor, a brave old
soldier, and a great favourite of the sultan, died fighting
gallantly to the last. Six hundred of the garrison fell, and three
hundred, for the most part wounded, were taken prisoners. The
British loss was only fifty officers and men, killed and
wounded.</p>
<p>The body of the governor was found, next morning, among the
slain; and Lord Cornwallis sent a message to Tippoo, with an offer
to have the body carried to his camp for burial. Tippoo, however,
replied that the proper place for a soldier to be buried was where
he fell, and accordingly the brave old soldier was laid to rest, in
the fort, by the Mohammedan troops in the Sepoy regiments; with all
military honours.</p>
<p>While the assault was going on, Tippoo--who, in spite of the
precautions taken, had received news of the intention of the
general, and had warned the garrison of the fort to be
prepared--despatched two heavy columns, as soon as the fire opened,
to attack the British camp on its flank. The movement had been
foreseen and prepared against, and the attacks were both repulsed
with heavy loss.</p>
<p>The capture of the fort was effected but just in time, for the
provisions were almost entirely consumed, and the scanty rations
were eked out by digging up the roots of grasses and vegetables
within the circuit of our pickets. The draught and carriage cattle
were dying daily, by hundreds. The few remaining, intended for
food, were in so emaciated a state that the flesh was scarcely
eatable. And, worst of all, the supply of ammunition was almost
exhausted.</p>
<p>The news of the fall of the fortress, considered by the natives
to be almost impregnable, under the very eyes of the sultan himself
and his great army, produced a widespread effect; greatly
depressing the spirit of Tippoo's adherents, while it
proportionately raised those of the British troops, and excited the
hopes of the peoples conquered by Tippoo and his father. One result
was that the polagars, or chiefs, of a tribe that had but recently
fallen under the yoke of Mysore, were at once emboldened to bring
in provisions to the town. As great stores were found in the
magazines in the fort, the starving animals regained some of their
condition during the ten days that the troops were occupied in
repairing the breaches, burying the dead, and placing the fort in a
condition to stand a siege, should Tippoo return during the absence
of the army.</p>
<p>When this was done, and the stores of ammunition replenished
from the magazines, the army started on its march north to
Deonhully, where they were to effect a junction with the cavalry
that the Nizam had agreed to furnish. As it marched, it passed
within three miles of Tippoo's army, which was proceeding in a
westerly direction. Tippoo could here have brought on a general
engagement, had he wished it; but the capture of Bangalore had for
the time cowed his spirit, and he continued his march, at a rate
that soon placed him beyond the reach of the British.</p>
<p>At Deonhully a junction was effected with the Nizam's horse, ten
thousand in number. These proved, however, of no real utility,
being a mere undisciplined herd, who displayed no energy whatever,
except in plundering the villagers. The united force now moved
southeast, to guard a great convoy which was advancing up the pass
of Amboor; and, when this had been met, returned to Bangalore.</p>
<p>During the operations of the siege, the Rajah's troop had
remained inactive, and Dick's duties as interpreter had been
nominal. At Bangalore, no English prisoners had been found, and he
was heartily glad when he heard that it was the intention of Lord
Cornwallis to march directly upon Seringapatam.</p>
<p>It was, indeed, a necessity for the English general to bring the
campaign to a speedy termination. The war was entailing a
tremendous strain upon the resources of the Company. The Nizam and
Mahrattis were not to be depended upon in the slightest degree, and
might at any moment change sides. The French revolution had broken
out, and all Europe was alarmed, and many of the English regiments
might, at any moment, be ordered to return home. Therefore,
anything like a thorough conquest of Mysore was impossible, and
there was only time to march to Seringapatam, to capture Tippoo's
capital, and to dictate terms to him.</p>
<p>Immense exertions were made to restore the efficiency of the
baggage train, and on the 3rd of May, the army marched from
Bangalore.</p>
<p>Tippoo, devoured alike by rage and fear, had taken no efficient
steps to meet the coming storm. His first thought was to prevent
the English from discovering the brutal cruelty with which his
white captives had been treated. He had, over and over again, given
the most solemn assurances that he had no white prisoners in his
hands; and he now endeavoured to prevent their obtaining evidence
of his falsehood and cruelty, by murdering the whole of those who
remained in his hands at Seringapatam. Having effected this
massacre, he next ordered all the pictures that he had caused to be
painted on the walls of his palace and other buildings, holding up
the English to the contempt and hatred of his subjects, to be
obliterated; and he also ordered the bridge over the northern loop
of the Cauvery to be destroyed. He then set out with his army to
bar the passage of the British to Seringapatam.</p>
<p>The weather was extremely bad when the British started. Rain
storms had deluged the country, and rendered the roads well nigh
impassable, and the movement was, in consequence, very slow. Tippoo
had taken up a strong position on the direct road and, in order to
avoid him, Lord Cornwallis took a more circuitous route, and Tippoo
was obliged to fall back.</p>
<p>The whole country through which the English passed had been
wasted. The villages were deserted, and not an inhabitant was to be
met with. Suffering much from wet, and the immense difficulties of
bringing on the transport, the army, on the 13th of May, arrived on
the Cauvery, nine miles east of Seringapatam. Here it had been
intended to cross the river, but the rains had so swollen the
stream that it was found impossible to ford it. It was, therefore,
determined to march to a point on the river, ten miles above
Seringapatam, where it was hoped that a better ford could be found;
and where a junction might be effected with General Abercrombie's
Bombay army, which was moving up from the Malabar coast, and was
but thirty or forty miles distant.</p>
<p>To effect this movement, it was necessary to pass within sight
of the capital. Tippoo came out, and took up a strong position, on
a rugged and almost inaccessible height. In front was a swamp
stretching to the river, while batteries had been thrown up to
sweep the approaches.</p>
<p>By a night march, accomplished in the midst of a tremendous
thunder and rain storm, Lord Cornwallis turned Tippoo's position.
The confusion occasioned by the storm, however, and the fact that
several of the corps lost their way, prevented the full success
hoped for from being attained, and gave Tippoo time to take up a
fresh position.</p>
<p>Colonel Maxwell led five battalions up a rocky ledge, held by a
strong body of the Mysore troops, carried it at the point of the
bayonet, and captured some guns. Tippoo immediately began to fall
back, but would have lost the greater portion of his artillery, had
not the Nizam's horse moved forward across the line by which the
British were advancing. Here they remained in an inert mass,
powerless to follow Tippoo, and a complete barrier to the British
advance. So unaccountable was their conduct, that it was generally
believed in the army that it was the result of treachery; and it
was with difficulty that the British troops could be restrained
from firing into the horde of horsemen, who had, from the time they
joined the force, been worse than useless.</p>
<p>As soon as the British could make their way through, or round,
the obstacle to their advance, they pursued the retreating force of
Tippoo, until it took refuge under the guns of the works round
Seringapatam. Their loss had been 2000, that of the British
500.</p>
<p>But the success was of little benefit to the latter. The
terrible state of the roads, and the want of food, had caused the
death of great numbers of draught animals, and the rest were so
debilitated as to be absolutely useless; and during the two days'
marches, that were required to reach the point on the river
previously determined upon, the battering train, and almost the
whole of the carts, were dragged along by the troops.</p>
<p>The position of the army was bad in the extreme. Neither food
nor forage were to be obtained from the country round. The troops
were almost on famine rations, worn out by fatigue, and by the
march through heavy rains, and nights spent on the sodden ground.
Tippoo's horsemen hovered round them. The cavalry of the Nizam,
which had been specially engaged to keep the foe at a distance,
never once ventured to engage them. It was absolutely impossible to
communicate with General Abercrombie, and after remaining but a
couple of days in his new camp, Lord Cornwallis felt that the army
could only be saved from destruction by immediate retreat.</p>
<p>No time was lost in carrying out the decision, when once arrived
at. Some natives were paid heavily to endeavour to make their way
to Abercrombie, with orders for him to retire down the ghauts again
into Malabar. Then the whole of the battering train, and the heavy
equipments, were destroyed; and on the 26th of May, the army
started for its long march back to Bangalore.</p>
<p>It had made but six miles when a body of horsemen, some two
thousand strong, were seen approaching. Preparations were instantly
made to repel an attack, when a soldier rode in, and announced that
the horsemen were the advance party of two Mahratta armies, close
at hand. This was welcome news, indeed, for Lord Cornwallis had no
idea that the Mahrattis were within two hundred miles of him, and
had come to believe that they had no intention, whatever, of
carrying out their engagements.</p>
<p>They had, it appeared, sent off a messenger, every day, to
inform him of their movements; but so vigilant were Tippoo's
cavalry, that not one of them ever reached the British. In a few
hours, the junction was completed, and the sufferings of the army
were at an end. Stores of every kind were abundant with the
Mahrattis, and not only food, but clothing, and every necessary of
life, could be purchased in the great bazaars, occupied by the
Mahratta traders who accompanied the army.</p>
<p>Had the two Mahratta armies arrived a couple of days earlier,
the destruction of the siege train would have been avoided,
Seringapatam would have been besieged, Abercrombie's army of eight
thousand men have joined, and the war brought at once to a
conclusion. It was now, however, too late. The means for
prosecuting the siege of so powerful a fortress were altogether
wanting, and the united armies returned, by easy marches, to
Bangalore.</p>
<p>On the march, the future plan of operations was decided upon.
Lord Cornwallis sent orders for the sum of 1,500,000 rupees, that
had been intended for China, to be at once despatched to Bangalore
for the use of the army, and the allies. The larger of the Mahratta
forces, under Purseram Bhow, with a detachment of Bombay troops
that had accompanied it, were to march to the northwest, and reduce
some of the forts and towns still held by the troops of Mysore. The
other Mahratta force, consisting chiefly of cavalry, under Hurry
Punt, were to remain at Bangalore.</p>
<p>The cause of the long delay, on the part of the Nizam and the
Mahrattis, was now explained. The Nizam's troops had spent six
months in the siege of the fortress of Capool, while an equal time
had been occupied, by Purseram Bhow, in the siege of Durwar, a very
strong place, garrisoned by ten thousand men.</p>
<p>Tippoo began negotiations immediately after his defeat near
Seringapatam, and these were continued until July, when they were
finally broken off. Some months were occupied in reducing a number
of the hill forts, commanding the entrances to the various passes.
Among these, two, deemed absolutely impregnable, Savandroog and
Nundidroog, were captured, but the attack upon Kistnagherry was
repulsed with considerable loss.</p>
<p>By the capture of these places, Lord Cornwallis obtained access
to supplies from the Malabar and Carnatic coasts, and was thus free
from the risk of any recurrence of the misfortunes that had marred
his previous attempt to lay siege to Seringapatam; and, on the 5th
of February, 1792, he again came within sight of Tippoo's
capital.</p>
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